Last night I watched the Giants baseball team play for thirteen innings until they
finally lost. By the twelfth inning the air was filled with flying pigeons, the
ground fairly covered with their feathers. It was night time, flight time, and
time to eat the leftover hot dogs and garlic fries that littered the stands.
Tom Lehrer would have chuckled: were we poisoning the pigeons in the Park,
as he so memorably sang?(1)

The American dream is a pigeon whose feathers are being plucked, one by one.
Does anyone notice, or are we too busy with boy toys and electronic marvels
to care? The dissonance, however, is beginning to spread, and not only here.
It has infected Brazil, Syria, Egypt, Turkey. There are simply too many people
in their winter of discontent, thank you Shakespeare. Eric Schmidt of course
would disagree. He of Google fame and immense fortune appears to think that
the technocrats must rule the world, at least according to his book
"The New Digital Age". One reviewer notes of the book: "How narrow-minded
do you have to be that you could look at war-torn Baghdad and only think that
it would be a great place to introduce Android phones?" What Schmidt and other
wanna-be titans fail to understand, as George Washington succinctly put it, is the
old Scottish saying, "Many mickles make a muckle", ie, grievances can pile
up.(2)

The elite of all ages have been driven to rule, to prove that their way is the only
way. The technocrats with their fantasies of empire-building are kith and kin to
Napoleon and Alexander the was-he-really-Great? Aung San Suu Kyi, in 1991, looked
at it slightly differently: "It is not power that corrupts but fear. Fear of losing
power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge of power corrupts
those who are subject to it".

I call it the Fear Follicle, for we seem to be just a hair's breadth away from
living in constant fear. Who is listening to us? Watching us? Data mining us?
Taking pictures of us? The Sword of Damocles hangs fragile above us,
and we barely notice. Dionysius tried to teach that "those who rule by fear
can potentially die by fear, and that they are therefore best advised to seek
means other than fear through which to govern" (quoted by John Keane in "Fear
and Democracy".)

We seem to be at war with ourselves and with each other. Is it really another
9/11 that we are afraid of, or is something else going on? Do you realize that
you could easily be a murderer, as could I? If someone threatened your children
wouldn't you murder to protect them? Of course you would, and so would I.
In that sense there is no "them" and no "us". We are peas of the same pod,
capable of being the worst of us.

We are also capable of being the best of us.

Which will we choose? How long will choices still be available?
Are we capable of making them, before others make them for us?